Effects of whey protein in carbohydrate-electrolyte drinks on post-exercise rehydration.

Eur J Sport Sci

d Department of Sports Science and Physical Education , The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin , New Territories , Hong Kong.

Published: June 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigated how different amounts of whey protein in carbohydrate-electrolyte drinks affect rehydration after exercise.
  • Ten male participants took part in five trials after a 60-minute run, consuming varying formulations of CE drinks to assess fluid retention and hydration levels.
  • Results showed that drinks with higher whey protein content promoted better fluid retention and higher plasma albumin levels, suggesting that whey protein can enhance recovery when consumed in sufficient amounts.

Article Abstract

The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of different amounts of whey protein in carbohydrate-electrolyte (CE) drinks on post-exercise rehydration. Ten males completed 5 trials in a randomised cross-over design. A 4-h recovery was applied after a 60-min run at 65% VO in each trial. During recovery, the participants ingested a high-carbohydrate CE drink (CE-H), a low-carbohydrate CE drink (CE-L), a high-whey-protein (33 g·L) CE drink (CW-H), a medium-whey-protein (22 g·L) CE drink (CW-M) or a low-whey-protein (15 g·L) CE drink (CW-L) in a volume equivalent to 150% of their body mass (BM) loss. The drinks were provided in six equal boluses and consumed by the participants within 150 min in each trial. After exercise, a BM loss of 2.15% ± 0.05% was achieved. Urine production was less in the CW-M and CW-H trials during recovery, which induced a greater fluid retention in the CW-M (51.0% ± 5.7%) and CW-H (55.4% ± 3.8%) trials than in any other trial (p < .05). The plasma albumin content was higher in the CW-H trial than in the CE-H and CE-L trials at 2 h (p < .05) and 3 h (p < .01) during recovery. The aldosterone concentration was lower in the CE-H trial than in the CW-M and CW-H trials after recovery (p < .05). It is concluded that the rehydration was improved when whey protein was co-ingested with CE drinks during a 4-h recovery after a 60-min run. However, this additive effect was only observed when whey protein concentration was at least 22 g·L in the current study.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17461391.2018.1442499DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

whey protein
8
protein carbohydrate-electrolyte
8
carbohydrate-electrolyte drinks
8
drinks post-exercise
8
post-exercise rehydration
8
drink
5
effects whey
4
rehydration purpose
4
purpose study
4
study examine
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!